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England Enjoys Mac Attack
One of the busiest days of the year for British Mac users saw the opening
of the largest Mac-focused show of the year, as well as the official
launch of the first Apple Computer Inc.-owned retail store in Europe.
Mac users waited in queues to get a glimpse of the latest Apple products
on the first day of Mac Expo 2004, at the Business Design Centre, in
Islington, England. Users were also eager to get a look at products
from third parties including Microsoft Corp., Quark Inc., Adobe Systems
Inc., FileMaker Inc., Hewlett-Packard Co. and Epson (UK) Ltd.
Reaction to the first day from both attendees and exhibitors was overwhelming
positive. Keith Harris, international vice president at FileMaker, described
the show as "very busy. We've been pleased with the number of people
so far."
Mark Jenkins, a graphic designer from Croydon, described his first experience
of the show as "very positive. It's nice to see so many products
in one place, as it really makes you appreciate that the Mac is alive
and well."
Clare Hopkins, a college IT support technician, travelled down from
Birmingham for this, her second Mac Expo. "This year looks a lot
busier than last year, which was pretty quiet on the first day. Even
the areas away from the center, where Apple [is], seem to have more
people in them."
Last year's show attracted some 23,000 visitors over three days, a figure
that show organisers expect to match and possibly beat this year.
While Mac fans were congregating in Islington, across town, on Regent
Street, Apple's senior vice president of retail, Ron Johnson, was officially
launching the first Apple store in Europe. The store, which opens to
the public on Saturday, is the 99th that the company has opened since
2001, and—as a sign of the importance of the European market—has
the largest floor space of any of its stores.
According to Johnson, "Apple's stores have always been about being
more than a store. Our goal is to be part of people's lives, so we need
to locate our stores to be part of their lives. We were thinking about
a London store, and we wanted it to be on London's busiest street."
The store stocks more than 1,500 Mac products, more than any of Apple's
other retail outlets.
Johnson also revealed that the company would be launching two other
stores in England in 2005, in Birmingham and Kent, and was "working
closely in Europe" to open other stores during 2005 and 2006.
By
Ian Betteridge
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